|
|
Every first Thursday of
the month, the
Southampton Trails
Preservation Society has
a meeting in the
basement of
Southampton
Town Hall.
The
meeting is open to the
public; I attend because
I’m the Chair of the
Communications
Committee.
During our May meeting,
I asked Ken Bieger,
Trail Maintenance Chair,
and Tony Garro, VP Hike
Planning and Scheduling,
if they could facilitate
a meeting to discuss
what route the Paumanok
Path (PP) would travel
between
Red
Creek
Park,
Hampton
Bays
and Big Fresh Pond,
North Sea.
I
knew it would be mostly
road walking, because
there is little
undeveloped land on
either side of the
canal.
To
write this article I
needed some help. I was
invited to an informal
meeting at the
Long
Pond
Greenbelt
Nature
Center,
located at 1061
Bridgehampton-Sag Harbor
Turnpike,
just north of the
Scuttlehole
Road/Turnpike
intersection,
Friday May 9.
We
examined several
alternative routes for
making this 130-mile
trail contiguous.
Tony and Ken were there,
and so were Eric
Woodward and Laura Smith.
Eric, an architect,
works with the STPS
trail crew often.
He
updated the Barrel Hill
hike in the Path-o-Pedia,
(litlc.org).
Eric has a talent for
using GPS, maps, and
computers.
Laura is the Principal
Environmental Analyst
with the Town of the
Southampton Community
Preservation Division.
Her
responsibilities include
compliance, education,
public outreach,
invasive eradication,
and trails planning on
CPF purchased
properties.
With Laura’s vision and
the talented ad–hoc
mapping team, the small
links of open space,
easements, and roads
were knitted together in
several different ways.
I’ll give a general
description of what
seemed to me to be the
most promising potential
route.
One
phrase that I heard
repeatedly was, “well if
we can’t get through
here, we can always
go……”
The
point always being, we
will finish this grand
regional initiative; we
just may have to go
north, west and south to
eventually get east.
I
was wrong in the
assumption I made in the
last article, that we
would try to bring the
PP out onto Red Creek
Road as close to Newtown
Road as possible.
Southampton
Town
purchased the Girl Scout
Camp (Camp
Tekawitha)
on
Red
Creek Road,
with Community
Preservation Fund
dollars.
The
trail on this property
will be an important
link in the Paumanok
Path.
It
will have restrooms, and
may have carefully
supervised camping; two
things that will make
the PP a more credible
long distance trail.
The
trail heads northwest to
go east, enabling the
hiker to remain in the
woods a little longer.
This will allow the
hiker to experience
several extraordinary
views of Squires Pond
along two quiet
residential streets.
Then the PP turns onto
fast-moving Red Creek Road
a bit further east.
From here, it’s a 2-mile
road walk on Red Creek
and then
Newtown Road,
under Sunrise Highway to
the one-way street along
the
Shinnecock
Canal.
Here the pedestrian
walkway on Montauk Highway
takes you over the
canal.
East
of Newtown Road and
north of
Montauk Highway,
is the
Shinnecock
Canal
Maritime
Heritage
Center.
The Town purchased this
three acre site at the
historic
Shinnecock
Canal
in 2001 through the
Community Preservation
Fund. The property
includes a Maritime
Museum,
Visitors’ Center, and
park facilities.
After crossing the
canal, I wound my way
through almost 3 miles
of residential streets,
and then arrived at the
Shinnecock Preserve, a
grassland habitat
managed by the Nature
Conservancy.
I
walked the part of the
preserve trail that runs
parallel to CR 39 for a
half mile.
Then
I crossed the Highway at
Tuckahoe Road.
Someday homes along the
Paumanok Path’s route
will be sought after by
long distance runners,
or people who just enjoy
being connected to a
trail that visits
coastal plain ponds,
pigmy pines, beech and
white pine woods,
maritime heath, and
inner woods, fresh and
brackish wetland, ocean,
and sound.
It
was another two mile
walk up Tuckahoe Road,
to Barker Island Road,
to Whites Lane.
From the middle of
Whites Lane,
I cut into
Tuckahoe
Swamp
and headed north where I
intersected a trail
marked with black owl
blazes.
I
followed this trail
almost a mile to Millstone Brook Road.
A
short walk up the road
and I was at the Nature
Conservancy’s Big Woods
Preserve.
I
estimate that I traveled
9 miles and only 2 of
the miles were off-road.
If
you are determined to
walk the entire trail,
this will be a bitter
pill to swallow, if you
want an enjoyable visit
with nature, you will
probably skip this
section of the Path.
|